Yamaha F100 problem

SeaDouble

Cadet
Joined
May 12, 2011
Messages
12
I have a ?99 Yamaha F100 that I am recently having a problem with. The motor has unknown total hours, and has provided me approximately 1300 hours of fairly trouble-free service over the last 5 years

Last trip out, as I was heading in across the bay I bumped it up from cruise up to 5000 RPM. After about 30 seconds or so, the engine suddenly bogged way down. I immediately backed off throttle and took it out of gear. No alarms, so I shut it down for a minute. Checked for obstructions to water intake, etc. and saw nothing. Started the motor back up and it is running rough with a loud knock that gets louder and faster with increased throttle. Power was lacking ? it would run at maybe 50% power with intermittent spots of hesitation on acceleration. Limped in and put her on the trailer. Checked the dipstick and noticed a very slight amount of water/oil slurry on the upper shaft of the dipstick. None seen down on top of the main body of oil.
Once at home, after sitting for a day I checked the dipstick again and noticed some fine dark particulate (felt smooth between fingers) in the oil on the dipstick (possible comtamination from the cylinder, I assume?) The oil was clean and fairly new prior to this trip.

Difficult for me to tell the source of the knock since the metal conducts the sound so well. Could be from top end (valve?) or bottom (connecting rod?)

Checked the compression on warm engine with throttle open.
Cylinder #1 : 145psi
#2: 120psi
#3: 150psi
#4: 150psi
I know #2 is a little low, but it is within the 75% rule, so it seems to me that the head gasket is likely not the culprit.

What do you guys think?
 

SeaDouble

Cadet
Joined
May 12, 2011
Messages
12
OK. We are talking about opposite sides of the %. According to the snap-on gauge I'm using, if one cylinder is less than 75% (which would be 25% less) of the PSI of another, then you have a problem. 120psi is 80% of 150 psi (or 20% less than).

Thanks for the input. So 120psi in cylinder 2 is a problem.
 
Last edited:

99yam40

Fleet Admiral
Joined
Sep 7, 2008
Messages
9,116
leak down test should tell you where it is leaking to

10% of 150 is 15 PSI
That may be what you should gauge it against and it is over the 10% difference

Who knows what the knock is at this point without looking
Leak down test and bore scope of cylinders and pistons is what I would start out with
 
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